Uruguayans, president included, back Suarez

26 June 2014 01:46

From the president down to football players and fans, Uruguayans rallied behind Luis Suarez on Wednesday as their controversial hero risked a possible World Cup ouster for biting an opponent.

On social networks and in the streets, the volatile 27-year-old's compatriots played down the incident with Italian defender Giorgio Chiellini.

"I did not see him bite anyone. But they give each other so many kicks and blows and normally they put up with it," President Jose Mujica told reporters, describing Suarez as "an excellent player."

But some reactions were also tinged with regret, shame, anger and fear over the fallout from any FIFA punishment that could deprive Uruguay of its best player for the rest of the World Cup.

Uruguay play Colombia on Saturday in the last-16 elimination round.

FIFA officials met late Wednesday to decide whether to punish Suarez after gathering evidence over the incident.

Suarez bit Chiellini in Uruguay's 1-0 victory over Italy on Tuesday, which eliminated the European team. It was his third biting offense since 2010.

Uruguay captain Diego Lugano lashed out at British media, saying it was "persecuting" the Liverpool striker -- an argument echoed by many in the South American nation of three million.

"It wasn't a bite, it was a headbutt," supporter Noelia Tabarez told AFP. "And we can only imagine what the other guy must have said to provoke him. They're always testing Suarez to see how he'll react."

She was one of many to question the events in the Brazilian city of Natal, but even those who accepted that he had bitten Chiellini defended Suarez.

"He's not going to stop being a hero because of one mistake," said Santiago Campomar, 24.

- 'Any other player.' -

But Alcides Ghiggia, who scored Uruguay's World Cup-winning goal in Rio in the 1950 trophy match, said Suarez clearly needed help.

"This boy's clearly not right in the head. That's just not something you do on the pitch,' said Ghiggia.

"He already did it before in England and now he's done it again. It's abnormal. It's a football match -- not a war or a fight.'

As Suarez's Facebook profile filled with dozens of messages in English and Italian branding him a "cannibal," other users rallied behind him.

"Be strong Luis. It's clear they're persecuting you," said user Sandra. "You're Uruguayan. We're like a stone in the shoe. We bother people. We're a small country but our people are big."

Another user, Nestor, chimed in: "If the supposed bite had been by any other player, nobody would have spent even a second on it. The problem is that it's Suarez."

Others attacked the Italian team and the British press.

Newspaper El Observador said that "the crazy Suarez is back," but stood up for the Liverpool star.

"This episode was all it took for the British media to eat up Luisito again," it said.

Some Uruguayans hunted down examples of unpunished football transgressions in the past, others scrutinized Chiellini's record for any evidence of misconduct.

Website montevideo.com published a 2012 photo of Chiellini that purportedly showed the Italian defender "has had this scar for years."